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Now showing items 121-140 of 1161
How should you further evaluate an adult with a testicular mass?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2007)
in which ultrasound and clinical exam are inconclusive or confl- icting, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can provide additional information to improve management and decrease unnecessary surgery (SOR: B, based on cohort trials of patient-oriented outcomes)....
Which treatments work best for hemorrhoids?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2009)
Excision is the most effective treatment for thrombosed external hemorrhoids (strength of recommendation [SOR]: B, retrospective studies). For prolapsed internal hemorrhoids, the best definitive treatment is traditional ...
Should you treat a symptomatic patient by phone when his child has confirmed strep throat?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2007)
on consensus guidelines) due to poor diagnostic accuracy. When you suspect GABHS pharyngitis either clinically or epidemio-logically, confirm the diagnosis of pharyngitis by a laboratory test. Patients with a positive throat culture or a rapid antigen detection...
Does digoxin decrease morbidity for those in sinus rhythm with heart failure?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2005)
In patients with congestive heart failure due to systolic dysfunction who are in normal sinus rhythm, digoxin therapy reduces rates of hospitalization, as well as clinical deterioration, defined as worsening New York Heart Association (NYHA...
Testosterone Therapy and Risk of Recurrence After Treatment for Prostate Cancer
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2013)
Evidence-Based Answer: Men with symptomatic androgen deprivation who have had clinically curative treatment for organ-confined prostate cancer may have symptomatic improvement with testosterone replacement therapy. (Strength of Recommendation [SOR...
Secondary Causes of Obesity
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2011)
velocity, delayed puberty, or clinical signs and symptoms of endocrine abnormalities (e.g., hirsutism, truncal obesity, violaceous striae). (Strength of recommendation [SOR]: C, based on expert opinion.) Underlying metabolic and genetic causes of obesity...
Diagnosing Von Willebrand Disease
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2010)
The diagnosis of vWD requires two clinical criteria: (1) a personal history, family history, or physical evidence of mucocutaneous bleeding and (2) a qualitative or quantitative decrease in functional activity of von Willebrand factor (v...
How can you best diagnose idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2007)
Diagnose idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (INPH) by clinical history, brain imaging, physical findings, and physiological criteria. The clinical examination must show the characteristic gait disturbance and either impaired cognition...
Treatment of Impetigo
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2007)
Topical mupirocin (Bactroban) and fusidic acid (not available in the United States) are more effective than placebo and at least as effective as oral antibiotics for the treatment of limited impetigo, and are better ...
How does tissue adhesive compare with suturing for superficial lacerations?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2005)
Tissue adhesives are effective and yield results comparable to those with conventional suturing of superficial, linear, and low-tension lacerations. The cosmetic outcome is similar; wound complications, such as infection ...
What is the best way to treat tinea cruris?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2006)
After clinical diagnosis and microscopic confirmation, tinea cruris is best treated with a topical allylamine or an azole antifungal (strength of recommendation: A, based on multiple randomized controlled trials [RCTs]). Differences in current...
In menopausal women, does fatigue indicate disease?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2005)
Though fatigue is a commonly reported symptom, high-quality studies evaluating it as a marker for diseases among menopausal women are lacking. Middle-aged women who report fatigue are more apt to screen positive for clinical depression or anxiety...
Raloxifene for Prevention of Osteoporotic Fractures
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2005)
Raloxifene (60 mg daily for three years) will prevent one vertebral fracture, including asymptomatic fractures, for every 46 postmenopausal women with osteoporosis or presence of previous vertebral fractures. Raloxifene ...
Treatment of Recurrent Vulvovaginal Candidiasis
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2011)
-month treatment regimen with an antifungal agent may result in an additional five to 10 months of clinical cure. (SOR: A, based on good-quality RCTs.) Suitable therapies include oral fluconazole (Diflucan; 150 mg once per week for six months) or oral itraconazole...
Prophylactic oxytocin: Before or after placental delivery?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2008)
Timing alone doesn't influence the drug's efficacy in preventing postpartum bleeding (strength of recommendation: B, randomized controlled trial [RCT] and prospective cohort studies).
Do patients at high risk of Alzheimer's disease benefit from early treatment?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2009)
Treating patients with early-stage Alzheimer's disease yields statistically significant, though perhaps not clinically significant, improvement in cognition and global function (strength of recommendation [SOR]: A, consistent evidence from multiple...
Monitoring Therapy for Patients with Alzheimer's Disease
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2007)
Patients with Alzheimer's disease who undergo treatment of any kind should be monitored eight weeks after initiation of therapy and at least every six months thereafter. (Strength of Recommendation: C, based on expert ...
Can we prevent splenic rupture for patients with infectious mononucleosis?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2005)
All patients with infectious mononucleosis should be considered at risk for splenic rupture since clinical severity, laboratory results, and physical exam are not reliable predictors of rupture (strength of recommendation [SOR]: B, case...
What's the best diagnostic evaluation of night sweats?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2007)
of recommendation [SOR]: C, based on usual practice and clinical opinion). No clinical trials have directly studied symptomatic relief of night sweats alone....
Should patients receive 23-valent pneumococcal vaccination more than once?
(Family Physicians Inquiries Network, 2006)
No patient-oriented evidence supports pneumococcal revaccination of any patient (high-risk or otherwise). Antibody levels may be augmented by revaccination; however, the clinical efficacy of revaccination, even among high-risk patients, is unknown...